Out Of Time
Sr. Member
- Apr 10, 2019
- 326
- 876
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
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Could be something else but definitely teeth from a herbivore of some type.
The Horse originated in the Americas. Became extinct during the Pleistocene era. Brought back over to the America’s by the Spaniard’s during their worldwide explorations. Sorry for the poor generic explanation!
Excellent info, thanks.
Still no idea if my finds are remains of early horse of reintroduced spanish one.
I've read that fossilization can happen slowly or rapidly depending on conditions.
Is there time for post-extinction horse's tooth to fossilize in the local conditions?
If they are fossilzed, they have to be from the early variety. Fossilization takes millions of years.
If that's the case that's pretty amazing.
The two teeth were collected separately but from approximately the same location.
I wonder if there is more to be found?
The answer is YES! Fossils dont typically exist in ones or twos. When you are finding non-spitter teeth, you will likely have more and possibly parts of the skull and more. Likely other animal varieties there too. Just have to get your eyes right and spend time looking.
Heres a crazy thing; fossil bones typically come out of the matrix dark. Anything from tan to black. But unlike "rocks" they sun bleach, even within a few years. The ones you found have been exposed for a while. You said these were in a creek bed. is that a water way creek, or more like a rain wash?